
Baruj Benacerraf Baruj Benacerraf, former George Fabyan Professor of Comparative Pathology, Chair of the Harvard Medical School (HMS) Department of Pathology (1970-1991), President of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (1980-1991), served as Professor and President emeritus (1991– ) until his death on August 2, 2011 at the age of 90. Baruj is best known for his pioneering work on the genetic control of the immune response and definition of immune response (IR) genes. His seminal work in this area resulted in his receipt of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1980. In addition, he helped develop an early understanding of the organization and function of mononuclear phagocytes, characterized IgG subclasses, discovered Fc receptors, and made the first observations that distinguished the modes of lymphocyte antigen recognition by cells later shown to be B and T cells. At HMS, he and his trainees conducted seminal studies that demonstrated MHC-restricted cooperation between T and B cells for humoral antibody responses. He also helped uncover the relationship between allo-recognition and T cell responses to foreign antigens presented by self-MHC molecules, creating a single conceptual framework with respect to MHC molecule function in immunity. Born in 1920 in Caracas, Venezuela to Sephardic Jewish parents of Spanish Moroccan and Algerian descent, Baruj spent his formative years in Paris. Escaping in 1939 from the imminent German invasion, he arrived in New York City and matriculated at Columbia University where he met the love of his life, Annette Dreyfus, who had also fled Europe. Baruj and Annette were married in 1943, and were inseparable until her death in June 2011. They always traveled together and she was a well-known figure both in the laboratory and at scientific meetings. After receiving his M.D. from the Medical College of Virginia, Baruj served in the U.S. Army, returning in 1947 to New York City to train at Columbia with the eminent immunochemist, Elvin Kabat, a highly effective but rigorous master. Benacerraf stands as his greatest student. Armed with his introduction to In tribute to their dedicated efforts to science and medicine, deceased members of the Harvard Faculty of Medicine (those at the rank of full or emeritus professor) receive a review of their life and contributions with a complete reflection, a Memorial Minute. immunochemistry, Benacerraf returned to Paris in 1949 and joined Bernard Halpern’s lab at the Hôpital The Harvard Medical School years Broussais where he studied the phagocytes of the reticuloendothelial system (RES). For this elegant work, he was awarded the gold medal of the Reticuloendothelial Society. In July of 1970, Baruj entered a new era as he moved his laboratory to Boston to become chair of the Department of Pathology at HMS and George Fabyan Professor of Comparative Pathology. Baruj played His luster did not go unnoticed. Lewis Thomas, a preeminent biomedical scientist of the era, was a crucial and central role in the emergence of Harvard as a leading center of immunological research. shopping for talent in his efforts to make the NYU medical school an immunological powerhouse. In This resulted from the enormously influential studies conducted in his own laboratory, as well as his persuading Baruj to return to New York in 1956, Thomas gained an outstanding faculty member and remarkably effective and perceptive use of the Pathology chair’s appointment power, which permitted a scientist who would prove to be the intellectual guru of world-leading research in immunology. At him to recruit a cadre of outstanding faculty members who have gone on to their own stellar careers. NYU, Baruj became the center of a distinguished group of scientists that included Michael Heidelberger, He also trained a generation of immunologists who have become leaders in their own right, including Zoltan Ovary, Edward Franklin, Jonathan Uhr, Ellen Vitetta, Bernard Levine, Jeanette Thorbecke, Steven Burakoff, Ron Germain, Ken Rock, the late Norman Letvin, Marc Greene, Robert Finberg, and Gregory Siskind, Robert McCluskey, and Victor and Ruth Nussenzweig. This period (1956-1968) at others. Not long after his arrival, he founded a graduate program in Immunology, the oldest degree- NYU would prove to be the Benacerraf wunderjahrs. He made seminal contributions to several fields of conferring graduate program at HMS, which has served as a model for other HMS graduate programs. immunology, essentially creating some of them. Among his great accomplishments were the discovery The Benacerraf legacy now includes more than 200 Program in Immunology students who have of the Fc receptors through which antibodies mediate their biologic functions, his subdivision of IgG obtained degrees since 1971. Baruj also initiated the first course in Immunology at Harvard University antibodies into subclasses with distinctive functions, and characterization of the carrier specificity of – the HMS course in Immunology for first-year medical students (taught with Emil Unanue) – and cellular immune responses and of immunologic memory, fundamentally leading to the concept that T provided the bulk of the lectures. This course presented immunology in the framework of landmark cells and B cells display distinct patterns of specificity, foretelling T and B cell cooperation. experiments, giving students not only knowledge of the dynamically evolving field of immunology, but also life-long insights into the scientific method. The NYU era marked his training, in a very small lab, of a series of outstanding scientists, including Jeanette Thorbecke, Stuart Schlossman, Lloyd Old, Ruth and Victor Nussenzweig, Bernard Levine, Fred One of Baruj’s great gifts was his ability to bring people into his family. There are numerous stories of Kantor, Kurt Bloch, François Kourilsky, Arthur Berken, Ira Green and Bill Paul. This period initiated a his generosity when members of his laboratory suffered misfortunes. His personal support for those who tradition of training that Baruj regarded as among his greatest achievements*, but, of course, the greatest worked with him was legendary. In addition he created an atmosphere of free thought and promoted an work of this period (and of his life) was the discovery with Levine that the capacity to mount immune advanced level of intellectual discourse on all subjects. He and Annette lunched every day in the small responses to very simple antigens was often determined by which allele an individual possessed at a key cafeteria that the Department subsidized and anyone could join them to talk about the important issues genetic locus, termed the immune response (IR) locus. He established that IR genes determined whether of the day. The conversation was as likely to turn to music and literature as it was to science, but all a given structure was capable of being immunogenic in a particular animal. With Green, he showed topics were accepted and encouraged. that the gene that controlled the capacity to respond to a given antigen also determined the ability of an animal to be the successful recipient of lymph node cells capable of responding to that antigen, implying The Dana-Farber years that IR gene function was expressed in “innate” cells and foretelling McDevitt’s subsequent discovery that IR genes were major histocompatibility (MHC) genes. At the time of his receipt of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, Baruj had recently accepted the position of President of the Sidney Farber Cancer Institute, now the Dana-Farber Cancer In 1968 Benacerraf accepted the post of chief of the NIAID Laboratory of Immunology in Bethesda, Institute (DFCI). Beyond his talents as a scientist, Baruj proved to be a brilliant administrator through MD. At the NIH, with Ira Green and Bill Paul, he completed the IR gene work that would merit receipt the application of outstanding scientific discernment in hiring and highly effective fiscal management, of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine a decade later. It was here that he initiated the T cell–B he transformed DFCI into one of the premier cancer centers and medical research organizations in the cell cooperation studies that became so important later in his career. Although his stay in Bethesda was world before stepping down in 1991. He continued to serve DFCI as a member of the Board of Trustees brief, Baruj’s efforts set the stage for the remarkable flowering of immunology in Bethesda that was to until his death. come. Baruj brought stability and grace to DFCI. His European formality was not always engaging, yet those *Benacerraf, B. 1974, Presidential Address to the American Association of Immunologists: The Training Experience. Journal within his ‘scientific family’ knew him as a generous and caring individual. Although never pretending of Immunology 113:431-437. to be democratic in his decisions, he was regarded by everyone as an innovative and just leader who immunochemistry, Benacerraf returned to Paris in 1949 and joined Bernard Halpern’s lab at the Hôpital The Harvard Medical School years Broussais where he studied the phagocytes of the reticuloendothelial system (RES). For this elegant work, he was awarded the gold medal of the Reticuloendothelial Society. In July of 1970, Baruj entered a new era as he moved his laboratory to Boston to become chair of the Department of Pathology at HMS and George Fabyan Professor of Comparative Pathology. Baruj played His luster did not go unnoticed. Lewis Thomas, a preeminent biomedical scientist of the era, was a crucial and central role in the emergence of Harvard as a leading center of immunological research. shopping for talent in his efforts to make the NYU medical school an immunological powerhouse. In This resulted from the enormously influential studies conducted in his own laboratory, as well as his persuading Baruj to return to New York in 1956, Thomas gained an outstanding faculty member and remarkably effective and perceptive use of the Pathology chair’s appointment power, which permitted a scientist who would prove to be the intellectual guru of world-leading research in immunology.
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